Since
receiving Mr. Catcher’s rejection note regarding Mamie’s damages, I had been
going to Manson Street just about every evening after work to paint the #apartment. Now that I was somewhat more experienced at painting, it didn’t take me as long as the last time. The fact that I was less painstakingly
pernickity about painting the trim probably had something to do with it too.
My sister Frederica
sometimes accompanied me when she wasn't too tired after a day of
entertaining my mom's summer camp kids, so at least we were able to spend some time
together catching up on news.
It
was now Sunday: a week to go until August.
Despite adding the words “Money Back” to my advertisement in the Schemmerhorn
Gazette, I was beginning to resign myself to the prospect of another month without #rent,
when a girl named Kristina called to inquire if the apartment was
still available. I told her it was, and
she asked if she could come along, right now that morning, to see it.
"Sure,"
I said. "I can be there in half an hour."
Leaving
Mummy and Frederica busily sewing a long mouse tail, stiffened with handfuls of
glue, onto a leotard that Bronwyn was to wear in one of the camp’s
end-of-summer performances, I drew up outside number 51, just as two very
dark-skinned girls rode up on bicycles.
One
of them mumblingly introduced herself as Kristina. She was short, stocky, and
wore her hair in lots of tight braids.
The other girl, younger, slimmer, but equally be-braided, was her sister, Priscilla. Both sported
shiny nose rings.
I
showed them around the apartment. It
looked spic and span, with its white walls and newly- painted floors. There was, however, just one problem. I’d painted the wooden floors a rich chocolaty-brown
color and mistakenly used wall paint instead of floor paint. As a result, our shoes stuck to the painted floorboards, coming away at each step with a squelchy, ripping sound, like pulling Velcro
apart. Luckily, Kristina and her sister
seemed not to notice the sound effect, though their heavy tread made the
ripping sound louder. They quickly
walked around the apartment, impressed by the size of it. Meanwhile, I was trying to size them up. They seemed pretty innocuous.
When we got to the kitchen, Kristina announced, "Okay, I wan' it."
"Really? Well, I'll need to get some information from
you first." I said. "First
of all, why are you moving?"
"I got me two keeds, and where we live, they don' 'ave no place to play that's
safe. Our street's pretty bad, you
know?"
"I
see. Well, you know your children would only
have the street to play in here too? At least we're on a dead end, and it's
pretty safe, judging by the number of kids who're always playing outside."
"I see that," Kristina agreed.
"How
many would be living here?" I asked. "And how would you be paying the rent?"
"Me
and muh keeds and sometimes muh sister'll be livin' heah. See, our parents died, so my sister, she
live mostly with muh uncle. Social
Services will pay the rent."
"All
right," I said. "It's almost
August. Will you be able to move in by the first of the month? Don't you
have to give your landlord notice?
And what about D.S.S.?"
"Yeah,
it might be too late, but I still wanna move in heah. Your ad said there’d be some money
back?"
"Yes. I'll take two hundred dollars off the
first month's rent, so you'd only need to pay me two-fifty for August."
"Okay,
I can handle that. Muh brother can gimme
the money."
I
pushed away the thought that I had gotten into trouble before from accepting
tenants on the spot. I was getting
desperate again, though, and Kristina and her sister couldn’t be as bad as Ray
and Co, could they?
"Would
you be prepared to sign a lease?" I asked.
"Sure,
okay."
I
quickly went over the lease I had brought with me, just in case. Kristina nodded at all the clauses I read aloud to her, such as the tenant being responsible for keeping the place clean, refraining from
illegal activity, etc. When we had
read through the whole thing, she signed on the dotted line, and I
congratulated her on becoming the new tenant of Apartment #2, 51 Manson
Street.
Priscilla
looked dully on during the whole process, only piping up at the end.
"How long is the #lease for?"
"A
year."
She grunted and
resumed her bored expression. Neither of
the sisters seemed to possess an overabundance of personality, but that was
okay: dull, boring #tenants were good.
"Would
you mind coming downstairs to meet my other tenants, if they're home?" I asked.
Giselle
and her boyfriend, Marvin, knew just about everyone in the #neighborhood. I thought it might be a good idea to run
Kristina by them, just in case.
Giselle
proved not to be at home, and Marvin was just getting into his car
outside. With a quick wave of his hand,
he roared off down the street. Oh, well.
I
drove home, rejoicing in the fact that I had a new tenant. My money worries should be over for a while. I pushed aside the little kernel of doubt that was niggling inside my head, telling me I shouldn’t have signed Kristina up so fast without at least checking her #references first. However, I had come to the conclusion that
a #landlord would say anything to get rid of a problem tenant, so references weren’t
very reliable, anyway.
A
few hours after I arrived home, the phone rang.
It was a girl called Charmayne Brown and she wanted to know if the apartment was still available. I told her I had
just rented it.
"Aw,"
she moaned. "My aunt lives right
next door. I really wanted to move in there."
"Oh,"
I said. "Well, uh, I suppose I
could still show you around. You never
know. It might fall through with this other girl."
"Yes, please," Charmayne said,
eagerly.
"You
want to come along?" I asked Frederica.
We
drove over to Schemmerhorn after lunch.
The floor was still sticky, and the first few steps we took into the
apartment still sounded like ripping Velcro.
I
looked at Frederica, she looked at me, and we burst into helpless giggles.
"Come
into my parlor," Frederica croaked in a horrid imitation of Cruella
Deville from The 101 Dalmatians.
Shortly
thereafter, Charmayne arrived. She was a short, heavyset girl with shoulder-length,
mousy brown hair and a stud in her nose.
She was accompanied by a taller, heavier girl.
"This
is my friend, Maureen." Charmayne waved at the other girl. "We're going to be roommates."
Maureen had a short bob of thick, black hair cut into the shape of a bowl sitting on her head.
It did nothing for her. She also
sported a nose stud. Nose wear seemed to be the
"in" thing nowadays. I’d seen two nose
rings and two nose studs in one day.
The
girls noticed the stickiness of the floor but didn’t remark on it. I tried to tread very lightly, so as to
minimize the Velcro effect as much as possible, but the heavy-footed Charmayne and
Maureen more than made up for my light tread.
We sounded quite spectacular as we ripped our way from room to
room. An equally heavy-footed Frederica
very kindly remained in the living room, while I showed the two girls
around.
They liked the place and were
very keen to take it. We ended up in the
living room by the mantelpiece, where I’d left some blank application forms.
Charmayne
had been telling me how she lived with her parents and was mother to a little boy. She had just found a job and wanted to live on
her own. Social Services would cover
part of her rent because of her single mother status. Maureen also had a job at a nearby
supermarket and would help with the balance of rent.
"Why
don't you fill out one of these, just in case?'
I handed an application to Charmayne.
"You know, I did sign a lease with the girl I showed around this
morning, but now that I've met you, I think I'd rather have you as tenants,
instead."
Charmayne
was busy filling out the application form, when a skinny youth sauntered in through the front door and nonchalantly joined our little group.
"Who
are you?" I asked.
"Stan
. . . Charmayne's brother," he answered casually around a wad of gum. "I live next door."
"Oh. With the aunt?"
"Yeah,
that's right," he drawled.
All
Stan had on was a pair of black cotton shorts and sneakers. The top of his jockey underpants showed above the waistband
of his shorts. Stan obviously thought
he looked "real cool,” judging by the number of times he glanced down at his shorts to check
that an inch of white underpant was still evident. If either had ridden up or down,
he'd hastily make adjustments. Neither Charmayne nor Maureen seem to find the garb of Charmayne's brother unusual.
I glanced at Frederica. She was standing rooted to the floor, a
pained expression on her face. I looked
away quickly, lest we make eye contact
and both break out into giggles.
Charmayne
finished filling out the application and handed the form back to me. I told her I would give her a call in a day or so.
When
the girls and Stan had gone, Frederica thankfully shifted position, to the sound of
much ripping and tearing.
"Oh,
that's better!" she gasped. "I
couldn't wait for them to go. I was stuck to the floor, and I didn't like to move because it'd make too
much noise."
She bent double and
laughed heartily, shaking as she let out suppressed mirth.
Giggling,
myself, I waited for Frederica to recover. When she was able to breathe again, we locked up and left.
Giselle
met us on the porch and motioned us back inside.
"Just
thought I'd let you know," she said.
"They make a lot of noise, those people next door, and those girls is two of 'em."
Giselle
looked so forbidding that I began to be turned off at the idea of Charmayne and
Maureen as tenants. Any hint of trouble
was enough for me, and coming from the mouth of my downstairs tenant, who'd have to live beneath the people she had warned me about . . .
"An'
you showed the apartment to some other woman too?" Giselle went on. "My boyfrien', he says you don't want
them people living' here, neither.
They're big drug dealers."
"Which
woman," I asked.
"The
one wit a whole mess a braids."
The
image of Linda Fletcher popped into my head.
Could she be the one Giselle meant?
"Are
you sure she had braids?" I asked.
"Was it someone who came a while back?"
"Dunno. My boyfrien' just said you don' want that
girl wit braids what came here."
For
some reason, I didn’t even think of Kristina, who definitely did have braids.
I
talked things over with Frederica on the way home.
"What did you think of Charmayne and
Co?" I asked her.
"Seemed okay."
"But
what about what Giselle said, about them making a lot of noise? It sounded like they'd be a rowdy bunch."
"Well,
if Charmayne and Maureen have to party, they can do it next door, can't they? Which would you rather have? These two, or the black girl you saw this
morning?"
I considered the question in an agony of indecision. Finally, when we were almost home, I decided.
"I'll
keep Kristina," I announced. "What would Giselle think if I decided to rent the place to Charmayne, after what she had just told us?"
"I can't say," said Frederica. "I didn't see Kristina, but I think those girls would've been all right."
"My instinct is telling me to go with Kristina," I said. "I've gone against my instincts before
and gotten into trouble, so this time I'm going with my gut.
We
drove for a few minutes, looking at the view. The road followed the river for quite a way
before turned away from it at an old, unused, brick railway station. The train tracks had been replaced by a bike path.
“What
did you think of the girls' nose studs and Stan's pants always falling down?” I
asked after a while.
“Pretty
funny,” Frederica said. “It's starting to become the ‘in’ thing in South
Africa too."
“Really? Well, speaking of fashion statements, I guess
I shouldn’t be too critical. I
never told you my geriatric ballerina story, did I.”
“No, you didn't. Do tell?”
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